What do you think when you hear the word budget?Â
Do you think: “Ugh – I know I should do one, but I’m going to discover I can’t spend the way I want,” or, “Budgeting will confirm I don’t make enough money; there’s no way I can afford to live the life I want.” Or perhaps you think you don’t need one, as you’ve always managed just fine.Â
What is the thought that is stopping you from budgeting?Â
Very few of us proactively plan our spending – many of us spend what we have and only do a budget when we start to notice we are spending more than we bring in and are heading into a financial crisis.Â
What if, instead, we proactively planned how to spend our money?Â
If we proactively planned our spending, we would have much higher odds of living the life we want instead of being controlled by our money – much like a ping pong ball in a pinball machine, which is how most of the world operates.Â
When starting over post-separation, having a spending plan, that is, a budget, allowed me to build the path to my dreams.Â
I needed to know where I stood financially, how much money was coming in, and how much would go out. I also needed to understand how and why I spent money.Â
At the time of my divorce, I was a stay-at-home mom and had been out of the workforce for five years. I also had a seven-year-old and a four-year-old that I had to care for on a shared parenting basis. In BC, where I live, having a shared parenting arrangement means that each parent must pay child support to their co-parent based on their total income for the most recently ended tax year. I didn’t have any reportable income for the past year, so I agreed that I could have an income of $30,000 imputed to me – this means that I could likely earn $30,000 for the coming year. Imputed income is not actual cash flow coming in, but it did mean that I would receive less child support from my co-parent.Â
I had about $1,000 per month coming in for child support, some government benefits ($120 per month) and nothing else. I also had zero cash reserves, but I did have RRSP savings and an accounting designation.Â
I also had done my budget – I needed another $1,000 monthly to cover the basics (housing and food).Â
I also knew, deep down, that there was no way I was going back to the work I had been doing before I had my children. The hours didn’t work, and it had been slowly destroying my soul as it was not aligned with my values. It would have certainly solved my money problems, though. I had made quite a bit more than the imputed $30,000.Â
So, while my budget seemed bleak (it proved I would have to scramble to cover everything), it created a path I could follow, and while I knew I would not be saving anything for a while, I would be living the life I wanted. I would have time to care for my children without worrying about childcare and have enough to cover the basics while creating a life that aligns with me.Â
An essential part of the budget process is knowing yourself.Â
Knowing yourself and your circumstances opens up an entirely new world. If you know what drives you and what you need in life, your budget will become the empowering tool it is meant to be, a tool to help you make decisions. It is not a set of instructions you have to follow for the rest of your life – just because we put that you get to spend $2000 a year on travel does not mean you can never spend a nickel more. You could take an extra job or cut back somewhere. Your budget allows you to decide where you save and spend your money, and if you know how you like doing this, then your budget combines with this knowledge to make the decisions work for you.
My strong understanding of my cash flow and financial and life circumstances allowed me to stay on my path. I dipped into my RRSP to pay for coaching and sold a few things to give me the extra cash flow I needed to keep afloat. Soon, friends who knew I needed work started giving me the odd accounting job to give me the additional cash flow I needed. At the same time, I built my business to become a collaborative professional supporting people navigating separation, and I then pivoted to become a financial coach. The first accounting gig I got was collections work – this was certainly not something I liked doing, but I knew it was a short-term term gig, and it led me to find other short-term accounting work and introduced me to people and their friends, many of whom would turn up in my life again in my new roles as a financial neutral and then a financial coach.Â
Ten years post-separation, I am truly living the life I want, and I’m still budgeting to keep living the life I want. Budgeting is a process that keeps us on the path to living our dreams.Â

